gandalf23 #1 Posted December 5, 2016 (edited) EDITED TO ADD: These are all sold! Thanks to everyone who responded! Merry Christmas! ************************ Hi everybody, A friend of the family passed away recently and while cleaning out his shed we found seven Texas Instruments TI-99a that were out of the box, and one that was in the box and looks rather new. Also a bunch of cartridges and some books. And a few cassettes. No joysticks though. We might have had floppy drives and such, but they were not labeled and several boxes of old 5.25 floppies and drives were donated to the local Goodwill. The one in the box has the cords, but we only found three other power cords. Again, there may have been some that got donated. Is anyone interested in buying the whole lot? I've taken some pictures and will attach them. Or should the we stick them on ebay? I figure y'all will most likely use them. I have no way to test them, my tv is newer and does not have rca jacks on it. Thanks! -Mike "gandalf23" Edited December 19, 2016 by gandalf23 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
atari2atari #2 Posted December 6, 2016 Great looking set of fun stuff! I'm looking for a simple computer for my toddler, since it's what I grew up playing with. I'll shoot you a PM and see if we can work something out! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
eric_assouline #3 Posted December 6, 2016 Nice ! Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
oracle_jedi #4 Posted December 8, 2016 That second picture looks like an original 1979 TI-99/4. Quite rare and much more valuable than the common TI-99/4A. A nice collection indeed! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
+Ksarul #5 Posted January 1, 2017 Definitely a good collection for whoever got it! Several of the cartridges in that lot were very HTF, and one is in the extremely HTF category (Video Vegas). I know of about fifteen surviving copies of that one in circulation. . .though a lot more were made, as it was one of Funware's earliest titles. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites